280 likes | 404 Views
Language, Literacy and Immigrant Integration in the United States Heide Spruck Wrigley, PhD LiteracyWork International Las Cruces, New Mexico. Literacywork Int. Literacywork International.
E N D
Language, Literacy and Immigrant Integration in the United States Heide Spruck Wrigley, PhD LiteracyWork International Las Cruces, New Mexico
Literacywork Int Literacywork International • LWI is a small social policy firm, focused on education and training of low educated adults and youth • Current projects: • Youth at Risk (Vancouver, B.C.) • Workforce ESL and workplace literacy (several projects) • NAAL: Demographic profiles and language and literacy skills of low literate immigrants • Professional development (ongoing PD Institutes) • Training in integrating multi-media into teaching and learning • MPI - National Policy Project
MPI –Center for Immigrant Integration Policy • Research Questions: • What are the language and literacy skills of foreign-born immigrants – with a special focus on • Low achieving youth • Low educated adults • Non-literate adults • How long will it take them to reach proficiency (6 levels)? • How much would it cost? • Where would the money come from? • Report: What would a high quality system look like?
Almost half of metro areas with 1 million plus immigrants are in the US
The Socio-political Context • 5.8 million permanent legal residents who are LEP • 6.4 million unauthorized immigrants who are LEP • Immigration reform provides an opportunity for change • Legalization –(amnesty) • Border control (the fence) • Employer sanctions • New emphasis on knowledge workers • Fees ($ 5000) • New citizenship test (patriotic assimilation)
Work numbers Literacy and Work • Immigrants are • 12% of US Residents • 15% of US workers • 21% of low wage workers • 45% of low skilled workers • Almost 50% of immigrant workers are LEP (limited English proficient).
The Need for Civic Integration • Concerns about societal fragmentation and ethno-cultural divisions • Concerns about an economic underclass (social substrata) of low skilled workers and their families. • Concerns about youth-at-risk and intergenerational integration • Need to bridge social and cultural distances between language groups and between English speakers and non-English speakers.
The case for investment The Case for Investment • Humanitarian: We are inviting immigrants to come to the US and now should help them thrive (no more sink or swim models) • Human Capital – Economic: Greater earnings with higher levels of L2 proficiency; greater taxes, fewer welfare $$$; greater global competitiveness • Social: Literacy services promote social cohesion and civic integration
EL Civics • Federally funded program, focused on • Life skills and civic knowledge • Preparation for citizenship test • Dimensions of civics • Cultural knowledge (holidays, key people) • Knowledge of history and government • But also focused on • Community awareness • Civic engagement • Advocacy for self and others • Leadership development
Experiential Civics • Scenarios and Case Studies (The company gets busted) • Virtual Visits (Visiting and documenting places, posting information and pictures on the Web) • Inquiry Maps (Explore topics of interest to students such as health, college, domestic violence) • Community Mapping (Illustrating through maps places and things that matter to students) • Brochures (Brochures designed by students for students and the community)
CASE EXAMPLE CLESE BRIGHT IDEASJust-in-Time Civics for Senior Immigrants and Refugees
The Students • Refugees often must cope with extreme losses and hard memories. • Provide opportunities for students to talk about things that matter to them.
Pre- and Post Assessment • Can Do list • Reading Demonstration • Civic engagement scale • Outcome Assessment • BEST Test (pre-post) • Competencies checklist
www.clese.org The Story
The Story • www.clese.org
Instructional Goals • Decrease social isolation. • Increase civic awareness and build civic engagement. • Develop communication skills in English. • Foster the “strategic competence” needed to navigate systems. • Link elderly immigrants and refugee communities with each other and with the wider community.
The Farm Field Trip • Create with real life context • Start with things that matter: food, vegetables, farms. • Provide opportunities for genuine conversation.
Compare Farm Prices and Supermarket Prices • Connect classroom to community. • Prepare, practice and review to maximize learning from field trips.
Navigate Systems • Provide hands-on learning experiences on how community institutions work. • Encourage social interactions. • Write the story
Connect to Other Communities • Speak in English with other immigrants. • Share cultures and appreciate diversity. • Be part of a community!
Promising Practices • Take advantage of multi-media • Put technology in the hands of the learners • Invite them to become creators of knowledge, not just users of literacy (video, brochures, PP) • Connect learners to the outside world
"No matter what our attempts to inform, it is our ability to inspire that will turn the tides." Holly Dilatush